Howard v. Lindmier

214 P.2d 737, 67 Wyo. 78, 1950 Wyo. LEXIS 6
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1950
Docket2454
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 214 P.2d 737 (Howard v. Lindmier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard v. Lindmier, 214 P.2d 737, 67 Wyo. 78, 1950 Wyo. LEXIS 6 (Wyo. 1950).

Opinion

*82 OPINION.

Blume, Justice.

In this case the State Board of Land Commissioners, on May 5, 1949, awarded to Mabel E. Lindmier, a lease for Section 16, Tp. 34, R. 67 W. 6th P. M., pursuant to her application for such lease. William Howard, who had also applied for a lease for the same land, appealed from the action of the Board of Land Commissioners to the District Court of Converse County. That court reversed the action of the Board ordering the lease for the land to be awarded to William Howard. From that judgment, Mabel E. Lindmier has appealed to this court. In view of the manner in which this case was entitled in the court below, we shall, generally speaking, referred to William Howard as the plaintiff, or that in combination with his name, and refer to Mabel E-. Lindmier as the defendant in the case.

The plaintiff for many years held a lease to Section 16 and to the East % oí Section 8 of the same Township and Range. The last lease expired on January 1, 1949. He applied for a new lease to commence with *83 the date last mentioned. The defendant applied for a lease for the same land. With her application she filed a statement alleging that 60 acres of land on Section 16 was a good meadow on which hay was raised up to 1935, but that the plaintiff violated his lease by failing to make a crop report and by not paying a fair rental for the land. She stated further: “Additional meadows could be developed and maintained by the clearing of brush, leveling of some land, and the building of spreader dikes at selected sites along Harney Creek. * * * These additional meadows, if developed, would increase the value of this land, not only to the State, but to any tenant that might acquire the lease on this land in the future. The applicant has developed hay land upon other land lying along Harney Creek under exactly the same conditions.” The Commissioner of Public Lands, hereinafter mentioned as the land commissioner, rendered his decision on the two conflicting applications, reciting that the plaintiff owns about 448 head of live stock; that defendant owns 42 head of live stock; that both parties own land adjoining the land sought to be leased; that he had given due consideration to all facts available; that the plaintiff is the old lessee, being the holder of an expiring lease; that he has all the qualifications required by law to entitle him to lease state-owned lands; that the defendant also has all the qualifications required by law to entitle her to lease state-owned lands; that both applicants have actual and necessary use for the land; that the preferential right which the plaintiff has, has been given due consideration. He then stated further: “Having given the facts and the law full consideration, the Commissioner is of the opinion that it is for the general benefit to the State and for the more complete development of the land to disallow the application of William Howard on Section 16-34-67 and allow the application of William Howard on E. *84 Section 8, Township 34, Range 67. That it will inure to the greatest benefit to the State to allow the application of Mabel E. Lindmier on Section 16-34-67 and disallow the application of Mabel E. Lindmier on E. *4, Section 8-34-67.” He made an order to that effect. On May 5, 1949, the Board of Land Commissioners approved the decision of the land commissioner.

Both parties herein own considerable land adjoining, and in the vicinity of, the land in controversy here. On the same day on which the leases herein were awarded, the Land Board also awarded to the plaintiff a lease for additional 940 acres of land, making a total award to him on that date of 1260 acres and of 640 acres to the defendant. It appears that the latter never had had any lease on any state land, while the plaintiff has had a lease on Section 16 herein mentioned and perhaps also on the other land since about the year 1916, or for the period of 32 or 33 years. We do not know whether these matters had any bearing on the letting of the leases herein, nor need it be determined whether they should have. At least the main reason why Section 16 above mentioned was leased to the defendant was evidently the fact that the Land Board wanted part of the land converted into meadow or hay land, which, while the matter was heard before the Board, the plaintiff refused to do. He wanted to leave the land in sagebrush and common grass. The defendant on the other hand agreed to convert part of the land into hay or meadow land.

We held in Banzhaf and Banzhaf vs. The Swan Company, 60 Wyo. 201, 148 P. 2d 225 following previous cases that the trial “de novo” as mentioned in Section 24-306, Wyo. Comp. St. 1945, is simply limited to a determination on the part of the District Court whether on the facts proven there was “an illegal exercise” of the Board’s discretion, a case of fraud, or a *85 “grave abuse of discretion.” It was also stated that the discretion of the Land Board should not lightly be overturned. That rule has been almost uniformly followed in this state from an early day commencing with Cooper vs. McCormick, 10 Wyo. 379, 69 P. 301. Our latest case on the subject (though involving a somewhat different question) is Mayor vs. Board of Land Commissioners, 64 Wyo. 409, 192 P. 2d 403, decided in 1948, which re-examines and approves the rule above mentioned. The various statutes on the subject and the latest amendments thereto were set out in full, so that we do not deem it necessary to do so here. The opinion was expressed as to the latest amendments that: “it would seem that the legislature was endeavoring to enlarge the discretion of the Board in its disposal of school lands under said Section 24-113, if possible.”

There is no fraud involved in the case at bar, nor any illegality in the proper sense of that term. So the question remains as to whether or not the Land Board was guilty of an abuse of discretion. Counsel for plaintiff contends that the court found the facts against the defendant and since the trial was de novo (Sections 24-306 and 24-308, Wyo. Comp. St. 1945), that finding is conclusive and will not be reviewed by this court. We considered that to some extent in Sullivan Co. et al. vs. Meer, 58 Wyo. 90, 102, 125 P. 2d. 168. But that was a different kind of a case. The contention here made by counsel for the plaintiff is substantially the same as that made in Miller vs. Hurley, 37 Wyo. 344, 262 P. 238, in which the contention there made was overruled. Even if the court comes to a different conclusion than that of the Land Board, considering the evidence as a whole, that in a case like that at bar is in no sense conclusive. The court must go further. It must be able to determine that the Land *86 Board might not reasonably, under the same state of facts, have come to a different conclusion; in other words that the Land Board abused its discretion. The point was considered in the case of Manning vs. Perry, 48 Ariz. 425, 62 P. 2d 693, in which the court had under consideration the leasing of public lands as in the case at bar. The court stated: “While the superior court on an appeal from the Land Department tries the case de novo, it should not be forgotten that the court is not the agency appointed by law to lease state lands. The legislature has vested that power in the Land Department.

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Bluebook (online)
214 P.2d 737, 67 Wyo. 78, 1950 Wyo. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-lindmier-wyo-1950.